Who Has Billions in Level 2 Assets?

Rapidly growing asset class could be a future troublemaker.

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The other day I opined in Who Has More Level 3 Assets Than Capital? that there were an exorbitant amount of Level 3 assets on the books of dealers and banks. I actually wouldn't be surprised if the Federal Reserve has some after they took a load of stuff off the hands of their broker/dealer buddies.

My comments, frankly, were greeted by some cheers and some jeers. Either is OK by me, as my opinion remains the same. If there are no observable inputs to even mark your bonds to a model, good luck selling them. For example, I saw a huge, $50 billion bid list a few weeks ago out for the bid. How many traded? None.

Why? Because the bonds were marked at 35 and bids came in at 25. So this Structured Investment Vehicle (SIV) that was being told to sell couldn't see, because if they had, the result would have been a negative equity situation. I've been trading mortgage backed securities for the better part of 25 years and I had no clue what levels to place on the bonds.

The bigger issue, however, is the speed at which Level 2 assets are growing. Level 2 assets, according to Bloomberg, are:

"Assets that have quoted market prices for similar instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active, and model derived valuations in which all significant inputs and significant value drivers in active markets."

This is otherwise known as "mark to model."

Below I've ranked companies by their absolute level of Level 2 assets and by ratio to total shareholder equity. I realize I may sound overly cautious to some, but in this business, discretion is the better part of value. Also, as an absolute return investor, I have to pay attention to something I think could be a problem. Even if it never develops, all I've lost is opportunity, not capital.

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